amygdala

Research Papers

Showing 6 of 30

Amygdala downregulation training using fMRI neurofeedback in post-traumatic stress disorder: a randomized, double-blind trial

Zhao, Zhiying, Duek, Or, Seidemann, Rebecca, Gordon, Charles, Walsh, Christopher, Romaker, Emma, Koller, William N., Horvath, Mark, Awasthi, Jitendra, Wang, Yao, O'Brien, Erin, Fichtenholtz, Harlan, Hampson, Michelle, Harpaz-Rotem, Ilan (2023) · Translational Psychiatry

Hyperactivation of amygdala is a neural marker for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and improvement in control over amygdala activity has been associated with treatment success in PTSD. In this randomized, double-blind clinical trial we evaluated the efficacy of a real-time fMRI neurofeedback intervention designed to train control over amygdala activity following trauma recall. Twenty-five patients with PTSD completed three sessions of neurofeedback training in which they attempted to downregulate the feedback signal after exposure to personalized trauma scripts. For subjects in the active experimental group (N = 14), the feedback signal was from a functionally localized region of their amygdala associated with trauma recall. For subjects in the control group (N = 11), yoked-sham feedback was provided. Changes in control over the amygdala and PTSD symptoms served as the primary and secondary outcome measurements, respectively. We found significantly greater improvements in control over amygdala activity in the active group than in the control group 30-days following the intervention. Both groups showed improvements in symptom scores, however the symptom reduction in the active group was not significantly greater than in the control group. Our finding of greater improvement in amygdala control suggests potential clinical application of neurofeedback in PTSD treatment. Thus, further development of amygdala neurofeedback training in PTSD treatment, including evaluation in larger samples, is warranted.

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Real-Time fMRI Neurofeedback Training Changes Brain Degree Centrality and Improves Sleep in Chronic Insomnia Disorder: A Resting-State fMRI Study

Li, Xiaodong, Li, Zhonglin, Zou, Zhi, Wu, Xiaolin, Gao, Hui, Wang, Caiyun, Zhou, Jing, Qi, Fei, Zhang, Miao, He, Junya, Qi, Xin, Yan, Fengshan, Dou, Shewei, Zhang, Hongju, Tong, Li, Li, Yongli (2022) · Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience

Background Chronic insomnia disorder (CID) is considered a major public health problem worldwide. Therefore, innovative and effective technical methods for studying the pathogenesis and clinical comprehensive treatment of CID are urgently needed. Methods Real-time fMRI neurofeedback (rtfMRI-NF), a new intervention, was used to train 28 patients with CID to regulate their amygdala activity for three sessions in 6 weeks. Resting-state fMRI data were collected before and after training. Then, voxel-based degree centrality (DC) method was used to explore the effect of rtfMRI-NF training. For regions with altered DC, we determined the specific connections to other regions that most strongly contributed to altered functional networks based on DC. Furthermore, the relationships between the DC value of the altered regions and changes in clinical variables were determined. Results Patients with CID showed increased DC in the right postcentral gyrus, Rolandic operculum, insula, and superior parietal gyrus and decreased DC in the right supramarginal gyrus, inferior parietal gyrus, angular gyrus, middle occipital gyrus, and middle temporal gyrus. Seed-based functional connectivity analyses based on the altered DC regions showed more details about the altered functional networks. Clinical scores in Pittsburgh sleep quality index, insomnia severity index (ISI), Beck depression inventory, and Hamilton anxiety scale decreased. Furthermore, a remarkable positive correlation was found between the changed ISI score and DC values of the right insula. Conclusions This study confirmed that amygdala-based rtfMRI-NF training altered the intrinsic functional hubs, which reshaped the abnormal functional connections caused by insomnia and improved the sleep of patients with CID. These findings contribute to our understanding of the neurobiological mechanism of rtfMRI-NF in insomnia treatment. However, additional double-blinded controlled clinical trials with larger sample sizes need to be conducted to confirm the effect of rtfMRI-NF from this initial study.

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Amygdala electrical-finger-print (AmygEFP) NeuroFeedback guided by individually-tailored Trauma script for post-traumatic stress disorder: Proof-of-concept

Fruchtman-Steinbok, Tom, Keynan, Jackob N., Cohen, Avihay, Jaljuli, Iman, Mermelstein, Shiri, Drori, Gadi, Routledge, Efrat, Krasnoshtein, Michael, Playle, Rebecca, Linden, David E. J., Hendler, Talma (2021) · NeuroImage. Clinical

BACKGROUND: Amygdala activity dysregulation plays a central role in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Hence learning to self-regulate one's amygdala activity may facilitate recovery. PTSD is further characterized by abnormal contextual processing related to the traumatic memory. Therefore, provoking the personal traumatic narrative while training amygdala down-regulation could enhance clinical efficacy. We report the results of a randomized controlled trial (NCT02544971) of a novel self-neuromodulation procedure (i.e. NeuroFeedback) for PTSD, aimed at down-regulating limbic activity while receiving feedback from an auditory script of a personal traumatic narrative. To scale-up applicability, neural activity was probed by an fMRI-informed EEG model of amygdala activity, termed Amygdala Electrical Finger-Print (AmygEFP). METHODS: Fifty-nine adults meeting DSM-5 criteria for PTSD were randomized between three groups: Trauma-script feedback interface (Trauma-NF) or Neutral feedback interface (Neutral-NF), and a control group of No-NF (to control for spontaneous recovery). Before and immediately after 15 NF training sessions patients were blindly assessed for PTSD symptoms and underwent one session of amygdala fMRI-NF for transferability testing. Follow-up clinical assessment was performed at 3- and 6-months following NF treatment. RESULTS: Patients in both NF groups learned to volitionally down-regulate AmygEFP signal and demonstrated a greater reduction in PTSD symptoms and improved down-regulation of the amygdala during fMRI-NF, compared to the No-NF group. The Trauma-NF group presented the largest immediate clinical improvement. CONCLUSIONS: This proof-of-concept study indicates the feasibility of the AmygEFP-NF process-driven as a scalable intervention for PTSD and illustrates its clinical potential. Further investigation is warranted to elucidate the contribution of AmygEFP-NF beyond exposure and placebo effects.

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Hippocampal volume recovery with real-time functional MRI amygdala neurofeedback emotional training for posttraumatic stress disorder

Misaki, Masaya, Mulyana, Beni, Zotev, Vadim, Wurfel, Brent E., Krueger, Frank, Feldner, Matthew, Bodurka, Jerzy (2021) · Journal of Affective Disorders

BACKGROUND: Small hippocampal volume is a prevalent neurostructural abnormality in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). However, whether the hippocampal atrophy is the cause of disease symptoms or a pre-existing risk factor and whether it is a reversible alteration or a permanent trait are unclear. The trait- or state-dependent alteration could also differ among the hippocampal subfields. METHODS: The study examined the longitudinal hippocampal volume changes due to positive emotional training with left amygdala (LA) real-time fMRI neurofeedback (rtfMRI-nf) in combat veterans with PTSD. The participants were trained to increase the neurofeedback signal from LA (experimental group, N = 20) or brain region not involved in emotion processing (control group, N = 9) by recalling a positive autobiographical memory. The pre- and post-training structural MRI brain images were processed with FreeSurfer to evaluate the hippocampal subfield volumes. Hippocampal volumes for healthy controls (N = 43) were also examined to evaluate the baseline abnormality in PTSD. RESULTS: A significant group difference in volume change was found in the left CA1 head region. This region had the most significant volume reduction at the baseline in PTSD. The experimental group showed a significant volume increase, while the control group showed a significant volume decrease in this region. The volume change in the control group negatively correlated with interval days between the scans. LIMITATIONS: A cognitive improvement due to the hippocampal volume increase could not be found with symptom scales. CONCLUSIONS: RtfMRI-nf positive emotional training increased the hippocampus volume among people with PTSD, suggesting that hippocampal atrophy in PTSD is modifiable.

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Effects of simultaneous real-time fMRI and EEG neurofeedback in major depressive disorder evaluated with brain electromagnetic tomography

Zotev, Vadim, Bodurka, Jerzy (2020) · NeuroImage. Clinical

Recently, we reported an emotion self-regulation study (Zotev et al., 2020), in which patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) used simultaneous real-time fMRI and EEG neurofeedback (rtfMRI-EEG-nf) to upregulate two fMRI and two EEG activity measures, relevant to MDD. The target measures included fMRI activities of the left amygdala and left rostral anterior cingulate cortex, and frontal EEG asymmetries in the alpha band (FAA) and high-beta band (FBA). Here we apply the exact low resolution brain electromagnetic tomography (eLORETA) to investigate EEG source activities during the rtfMRI-EEG-nf procedure. The exploratory analyses reveal significant changes in hemispheric lateralities of upper alpha and high-beta current source densities in the prefrontal regions, consistent with upregulation of the FAA and FBA during the rtfMRI-EEG-nf task. Similar laterality changes are observed for current source densities in the amygdala. Prefrontal upper alpha current density changes show significant negative correlations with anhedonia severity. Changes in prefrontal high-beta current density are consistent with reduction in comorbid anxiety. Comparisons with results of previous LORETA studies suggest that the rtfMRI-EEG-nf training is beneficial to MDD patients, and may have the ability to correct functional deficiencies associated with anhedonia and comorbid anxiety in MDD.

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Emotion self-regulation training in major depressive disorder using simultaneous real-time fMRI and EEG neurofeedback

Zotev, Vadim, Mayeli, Ahmad, Misaki, Masaya, Bodurka, Jerzy (2020) · NeuroImage. Clinical

Simultaneous real-time fMRI and EEG neurofeedback (rtfMRI-EEG-nf) is an emerging neuromodulation approach, that enables simultaneous volitional regulation of both hemodynamic (BOLD fMRI) and electrophysiological (EEG) brain activities. Here we report the first application of rtfMRI-EEG-nf for emotion self-regulation training in patients with major depressive disorder (MDD). In this proof-of-concept study, MDD patients in the experimental group (n = 16) used rtfMRI-EEG-nf during a happy emotion induction task to simultaneously upregulate two fMRI and two EEG activity measures relevant to MDD. The target measures included BOLD activities of the left amygdala (LA) and left rostral anterior cingulate cortex (rACC), and frontal EEG asymmetries in the alpha band (FAA, [7.5-12.5] Hz) and high-beta band (FBA, [21-30] Hz). MDD patients in the control group (n = 8) were provided with sham feedback signals. An advanced procedure for improved real-time EEG-fMRI artifact correction was implemented. The experimental group participants demonstrated significant upregulation of the LA BOLD activity, FAA, and FBA during the rtfMRI-EEG-nf task, as well as significant enhancement in fMRI connectivity between the LA and left rACC. Average individual FAA changes during the rtfMRI-EEG-nf task positively correlated with depression and anhedonia severities, and negatively correlated with after-vs-before changes in depressed mood ratings. Temporal correlations between the FAA and FBA time courses and the LA BOLD activity were significantly enhanced during the rtfMRI-EEG-nf task. The experimental group participants reported significant mood improvements after the training. Our results suggest that the rtfMRI-EEG-nf may have potential for treatment of MDD.

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